QUESTIONS & ANSWERS:
AGING and AGING PARENTS
Please remember, this column is designed to help the consumer seeking
behavioral-health information, and not intended to be any form of psychotherapy
or a replacement for professional, individualized services. Opinions expressed
in the column are those of the columnist and do not represent the position of
other SelfhelpMagazine.com staff.
Question
My father has had a series of medical problems and is in the hospital for a
heart attack. He is very angry, saying mean thinks to my mother, wants to go
home, and everyone is having trouble coping. Any suggestions?
Answer
It is important to look at this situation from both sides. First, your father is suffering a
great deal from the loss of his health and the helplessness that comes with being
hospitalized. Hospitalization is especially difficult and more confusing the older you
become.
Anesthesia can cause a dramatic emotional change. His anger and depression is also a
normal response to his situation. The question is the degree to which his emotions swing
and the duration of them. That will determine if intervention is necessary or if this is a
transient period.
Your mother is suffering from the verbal abuse but it is probably not aimed directly at her
-- the closest family members are usually the recipients.
Discuss the situation with your father's physicians. You can always request a social work
or psychiatric consult to assess this change in his mood. Make sure your mother has
someone to contact and to talk with. She can also request to have a meeting with a social
worker at the hospital to help her with her concerns.
Both parents need to have their feelings acknowledged and validated. Your father needs to
know that you understand his anger. Your mother needs to know that she is in a difficult
situation and should find support for herself.
Discuss with your physicians the medications that your father is taking. Can any of these
cause emotional changes? Is it only the family member who your father is mistreating or is
it the staff as well? Elicit the help of the hospital staff to assess the situation both
physically and medically to see what might be physiological and what is psychological.
From there, a decision can be made if more serious intervention needs to be made.
3/12/98
Emily Carton MA, LISW, is a licensed
social worker who works with Elder Options, a private care social service firm
in the DC Metropolitan Area. She is also an is an intern in Bibliotherapy at
St. Elizabeth's Hospital in Washington D.C.
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